Differential performance on measures of episodic and
semantic memory were examined in AD, cortical vascular
dementia (CVaD), subcortical vascular dementia (SVaD),
and controls. Groups were matched on age, education, and
gender; dementia groups also were matched on severity.
Recognition/retrieval differences were found only between
SVaD and AD groups, not between CVaD and AD. Thus, recognition/retrieval
differences are likely secondary to subcortical pathology
rather than to vascular etiology per se. Similarly,
significant numbers of memory errors were associated with
cortical pathology, regardless of etiology. Error rate
differences were found only between SVaD and AD groups,
not between CVaD and AD. Finally, rapid forgetting was
unique to AD; however, since no difference was found between
SVaD and AD, rapid forgetting may occur only as AD progresses.
No semantic memory measure differentiated AD from either
CVaD or SVaD subjects. Results suggest that some previously
reported episodic differences may be due to cortical versus
white matter subcortical pathology, rather than to AD versus
vascular etiology. (JINS, 2001, 7, 563–573.)